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J5-6 Lesson 10 - Meiosis Student

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Lesson 10: Sex cells and Meiosis

Key words:
Gametes
sex cells
Egg
- female sex cells
Sperm
- male sex cells
Haploid number - number of chromosomes found in a gamete (N); one of each chromosome
Diploid number - number of chromosomes found in a somatic cell (2N) two of each
chromosome
Somatic cell
- body cell/nongametic cell
Meiosis
- type of cell division that reduces chromosome number by and produces
gametes
Polar Bodies
- Smaller gametes resulting from meiosis in eggs.
Key ideas: During sexual reproduction, two sex cells join. Each sex cell contains half the number
of chromosomes found in the body cells of the parents. The process in which the number of
chromosomes in a cell is reduced by half is called meiosis.
Our bodies consist of millions of cells. However, all humans begin life as only one cell. The
one cell is formed by the joining of two sex cells: one from the mother and one from the father.
After 36 hours, the cell divides to form two cells. Five days after the first cell formed., it has
divided enough to produce 120 cells.

Sex cells. All organisms that reproduce sexually (plants as well as most animal forms)
produce sex cells called gametes (GAM-eets). Female gametes are called egg cells. Male
gametes are called sperm. Each gamete contains half the number of chromosomes as a somatic
cell of the organism. The number of chromosomes is a gamete is described as the haploid
number (HAP-loid-NUM-buhr).
A single somatic (body) cell from a particular organism contains a certain number of
chromosomes. For example, human somatic cells contain 46 chromosomes each. The somatic cell
of a dog contains 78 chromosomes and an earthworm has 36 chromosomes. The number of
chromosomes in a single body cell is called the diploid number (DIHP-loid NUM-buhr). Since the
body cell of a spider plant contains 24 chromosomes, its diploid number is 24.

Meiosis and Chromosomes. The kind of cell division by which diploid cells produce haploid
gametes is called meiosis (my-OH-sihs) Meiosis occurs in two stages. The first stage resembles
mitosis. In this stage, the chromosomes in the parent cell duplicate, or make exact copies of
each other. When this cell divides, each of the two resulting daughter cells contains the same
number of chromosomes as the original parent cell.

In the second stage of meiosis, each daughter cell divides a second time. Unlike mitosis,
this second cell division does not begin with duplication the chromosomes. Thus, when the
daughter cells divide, each of the four cells produced has half as many chromosomes as the
original parent cell Fig. 10.1 shows meiosis in a human cell.
By dividing twice, the original diploid cell produces haploid gametes. When two such
gametes join during sexual reproduction, the form a single cell that again has a diploid number.

Sperm and Eggs. During meiosis, a single cell divides twice to form four daughter cells.
In males, meiosis produces four sperm cells of almost equal size. In females, meiosis produces
four cells of varying size. One cell receives most of the cytoplasm, making it much larger than
the other three cells. The large cell becomes the female gamete, or egg cell. The three smaller
cells are called polar bodies. Polar bodies are not involved in sexual reproduction but serve a
support function.
Occasionally, something goes wrong during meiosis. The parent cell does not separate
evenly, causing a daughter cell to have an abnormal number of chromosomes. If this gamete
joins with a normal gamete during sexual reproduction, the new cell that forms the incorrect
diploid number; either too many or too few chromosomes. An organism that develops from this
cell will have a chromosomal disorder like Turners syndrome (missing one X chromosome) or
Downs syndrome (an extra #21 chromosome). This is true of most animals though plants can
often survive with extra chromosomes. Horticulturists use this trait to created different
colored flowers and other food crops.

Complete the following passage using words from the list below.
divisions
diploid number
egg
four
haploid number
meiosis
polar bodies
two
The

(1)

______________________________

of

an

gametes
somatic
organism

is

twice

its

(2)______________________. A (3) ___________________ contains half the number of


chromosomes found in the (4)__________________________________ cells of an organism.
Gametes are formed through (5) ___________________________________. In this
process, a parent cell undergoes two (6) _______________________The first stage of
meiosis produces (7) _____________ daughter cells. In males, the second stage of meiosis
results in (8) ____________sperm cells. In females, one (9) _________ and three (10)
_________________ are formed.
Complete exercises 14-18 by adding the correct number to the sentences.
Use the FRUIT FLY as an example.
11. If the body cell of a fruit fly contains 8 chromosomes, its diploid number is __________.
12. The haploid number of a fruit fly is _______________
13. When a fruit fly somatic cell doubles it chromosome number to begin meiosis it contains
________ chromosomes.
14. Cells produced by the first division of meiosis contain ______ chromosomes.
15. Cells produced by the second division of meiosis contain _____ chromosomes.
16 EXPLAIN the difference between a somatic and gametic cell.

17. How are the sperm cells and egg cells produced by meiosis different?

18. What are THREE WAYS mitosis and Meiosis are different?
Mitosis
Meiosis
A.
B.
C.

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